4.8 Article

Graphene and Rice-Straw-Fiber-Based 3D Photothermal Aerogels for Highly Efficient Solar Evaporation

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 12, Issue 13, Pages 15279-15287

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c01707

Keywords

photothermal; water evaporation; aerogel; reduced graphene oxide; solar-thermal energy

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [FT190100485]
  2. Future Industries Institute, University of South Australia
  3. Huasheng Graphite Co., Ltd.
  4. Australian Research Council [FT190100485] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Solar-steam generation is one of the most promising technologies to mitigate the issue of clean water shortage using sustainable solar energy. Photothermal aerogels, especially the three-dimensional (3D) graphene-based aerogels, have shown unique merits for solar-steam generation, such as lightweight, high flexibility, and superior evaporation rate and energy efficiency. However, 3D aerogels require much more raw materials of graphene, which limits their large-scale applications. In this study, 3D photothermal aerogels composed of reduced graphene oxide (RGO) nanosheets, rice-straw-derived cellulose fibers, and sodium alginate (SA) are prepared for solar-steam generation. The use of rice straw fibers as skeletal support significantly reduces the need for the more expensive RGO by 43.5%, turning the rice straw biomass waste into value-added materials. The integration of rice straw fibers and RGO significantly enhances the flexibility and mechanical stability of the obtained photothermal RGO-SA-cellulose aerogel. The photothermal aerogel shows a strong broad-band light absorption of 96-97%. During solar-steam generation, the 3D photothermal aerogel effectively decreases the radiation and convection energy loss while enhancing energy harvesting from the environment, leading to an extremely high evaporation rate of 2.25 kg m(-2) h(-1), corresponding to an energy conversion efficiency of 88.9% under 1.0 sun irradiation. The salinity of clean water collected during the evaporation of real seawater is only 0.37 ppm. The materials are environmentally friendly and cost-effective, showing great potential for real-world desalination applications.

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